...more recent posts
Stopped in a cab at a light on King street yesterday evening. A man hobbles up to the drivers window and with outstretched palm mumbles something neither I nor the driver could understand. The driver, from under his elaborate turban, asks for clarification, although we both know in general what he was asking. "Ten cents'n 'll bring you good luck" the man repeats, not very convincingly. Somewhere between weariness and exasperation the driver leans over and fishes a coin out of his ashtray, and without missing a beat says "Why don't you bring your own self luck? Here's a quarter." To which the man admits "I don't believe in luck."
Trellix licenses Blogger. Dan Bricklin, who wrote the seminal software program Visicalc (which really started the whole personal computer thing,) and who now works for Trellix developing some sort of on line bloggish thing, explains the deal.
I think today might be a good time to try another round of meta bird watching. I've heard the rare Wilson Watcher might be in Central Park today. Maybe I'll head up and try to spot one.
Nothing like a good post-dot-com-bubble hyperlinked epic poem to put it all in perspective.
Here's a good resource for information on Claude Shannon, information theory, and entropy.
And I can never mention entropy without remembering the line Kesey has the young girl say in Demon Box: "Entropy? That's only a problem in a closed system."
Here are a few photos from the Laffoley exhibit we went to last night. I had no idea the painting were this large. Incredible. Great time. Happy birthday Bill! (Warning: the first page is sort of large. Approximately 400k.)
Well, despite the fact that I thought it was Tuesday today, things are going pretty well. I still have work to do on the site I'm getting up now for unmentioned "real people" (I like to keep that dirty business stuff off this page) but it has clearly passed out of my stewardship as of today. Still a lot of work bringing others up to speed, but that mostly involves writing documentation. Boring, sure, but not the sort of work where suddenly everything can unravel and leave you back at the beginning. Hopefully with a strong showing this weekend I can have all the decks cleared for a Monday morning start in on getting this site transfered to the new software. I don't really know how long that will take, but I guess I'm hoping for May day at this point. Wasn't that some sort of deadline last year? Anyway, I still have to get the archives working, and the new comment pages are only threaded at this point, and of course they need to be nested. Those shouldn't take too long, but both issues can be sort of tricky. Still, May 1 seems like a good bet. After that we should be able to grow a little more quickly, although, as I like to remind people, growing just for the sake of growing isn't really the point. Still, I hope it becomes more fun for people as we go. You'll all have a little more power in the new universe, and who can disagree with that?
Hey F. are you out there? I need your email for the electronic part of our correspondence. I think it's on my unbootable computer. (jimb at digitalmediatree.com) Thanks.
YAWVP (yet another web visualization project.) What does the web look like? A jellyfish perhaps?
Tim Berners-Lee has published an aritcle in the Scientific American explaning the "semantic web". Rather mundane examples, but I guess that's the cost of writing something technical that could be widely understood. I'm sure you can think of something more interesting than scheduling car pools. Still, all the background is in there. Very clear.